New Yorker Wikipedia "Essjay" Fraud Aftermath

With the retirement of Essjay in the Wikipedia scandal over fabricating credentials,
attention has shifted to "What Did He Know And When Did He Know It?"
type questions for Jimmy Wales. The critic's theory is that Jimmy
Wales regarded lying about credentials to the New Yorker as
no big deal, but lying in the Wikipedia community was
unacceptable to him. Thus, he keeps saying that until this weekend, he
didn't realize how much Essjay was lying in Wikipedia, which is
probably true, and deliberately passing over the charge that he did
know for weeks that Essjay had lied to the New Yorker, but his
attitude was "I regard it as a pseudonym and I don't really have a
problem with it.".

In terms of citizen-journalism, I had earlier sent Jimmy Wales some
email to check the accuracy of that quote. He replied last night, but
his reply didn't help much in disambiguation. [Update: Got some more nice mail from him. I've got to say I'm impressed that he was at least willing to respond.]

It'll be hard to pin him down on this, since he's not stupid, and it's
very understandable that given the firestorm, he'd never want to come
out and blatantly admit he didn't care about fraud to the New Yorker.

Jimmy, to call yourself a tenured professor, when you aren't one, is not a "pseudonym." It's identity fraud. And the full question is not why you appointed Essjay to ArbCom, but: why did you ignore the obvious moral implications of the fact that he had fraudulently pretended to be a professor -- ignoring those implications even to the point of giving him a job and appointing him to ArbCom -- until now? The problem isn't just that he won arguments on WP by citing his false credentials. It's that he got into positions of authority in WP that way, he was interviewed by The New Yorker that way, and played make believe that he was a professor for six hours straight to a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist. And you had to know all of this before this morning. Your claim, "I want to make it perfectly clear that my past support of EssJay in this matter was fully based on a lack of knowledge about what has been going on," seems disingenuous. You fully knew that he was impersonating a professor and you had to know that he had gotten advantages as the reward of his duplicity; and, despite knowing this no doubt last January, you gave him a job and appointed him to ArbCom anyway. --Larry Sanger 01:36, 4 March 2007 (UTC)

The Freakonomics blog also has raised the matter.
Right now, it's a battle over who has more power to define the media
view of this. Wikipedia has both many who love it, and many who hate
it. I won't speculate on which side will win (it sure doesn't depend on
who is right ... :-( ).

Rogers Cadenhead - "There aren't many situations in life where an anonymous mob of people, working in an atmosphere allergic to the concept of personal accountability, is relied upon to achieve a societal good."

Shelley Powers - "Interesting how hard items like ethics, honor, and truth metamorphose in the the soft environment encompassed by so-called social software."

When Sanger uses the word "moral" while talking about Wales, I can't help but raise my eyebrows. Wales seems to have some sort of moral aphasia. A lack of awareness of right and wrong. I'm not sure if it's a mental health issue, or simply a result of his well known love of the Ayn Rand cult of selfishness.

I've been telling Wales, via email, about an individual who is far more unethical than Essjay. I've been doing this over seven months. Wales' responses have been of the same desultory type as his initial "fraud doesn't matter" reaction to Essjay.

Based on Jimbo's subsequent remedial measures, what Jimbo knew once upon a time about Essjay is irrelevant. Much more important is that a significant number of Wikipedians with administrator privileges who are still stuck in denial are doing their level best to censor anyone who has anything critical to say about Essjay.